Re: Gary's Corner
Posted: Sun Mar 08, 2026 3:04 am
Apparently, it wasn't a long trip.
Apparently, it wasn't a long trip.
The pessimism and cynicism prevent you from starting. They don't prevent you from getting something out of it once you begin.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Sun Mar 08, 2026 1:30 amWhat difference is sitting quietly in the lotus position going to make? Hypnosis doesn't work on me either. I'm too entrenched in pessimism and cynicism for things like that to affect me.phyllo wrote: ↑Fri Mar 06, 2026 10:57 pmI didn't say that you should meditate in order to "know God".I said I'm not interested in reading the Bible, going to church or praying or meditating. Is the only way to "know" God to do things like read the Bible, go to church, and meditate? I couldn't know God any other way?
I think that you should meditate in order to feel better about the world, life and yourself.
The world is for everyone.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Sun Mar 08, 2026 1:01 am The religious drive me crazy. So maybe the world is for the godly. The rest of us don't count and will just end up in Hell.
When I came down with my first psychosis, I had recently turned agnostic and was working for a Federal Government agency in D.C. My direct report to boss was a born-again Christian fanatic about the same age as me. He had a way of messing with my head, flipping the script on things, and when I had my first psychosis, I was clutching a Bible that someone had given me and mumbling incoherently about religious themed stuff. Literally, he drove me crazy. It was my first up close encounter with a fanatical born again. I was always depressed about life but I had never had a psychosis before that.
No. It makes me feel like a blasphemer who is going to Hell because I don't accept Christianity as the truth. Should I just stop arguing back with people who basically flip everything I learned in college to introduce me to the dungeon of the Bible?
They are, actually. That's why I supply the Biblical references...so you will know it's not my word.
Rather, many kinds of people who hold many beliefs want to call themselves "Christians." Some are, and some not, of course, as with any other creed or identification. One doesn't become a woman or a man by false identification, either. And in the end, either there will be Judgment, or there will not; so some portion of this group will be exposed as erring in that, one day.Christians hold a wide range of beliefs about God, sin and hell.
Indeed there are some. But are they following Biblical doctrine, or their own preferences? There's a way to find out.There are many who believe in universal salvation ... that everyone is saved. God is not a "loser". God doesn't lose a single soul.
Non-sequitur. All this means is that there is a range of opinions. But opinions aren't possibilities. There is but one real possibility. Either we believe the Word of God about that, or we do not.Many believe that there is no hell. Many believe that hell is a place of temporary rehabilitation.
So you see, there are a range of possibilities.
This, again, is a non-sequitur. It does not logically follow that if there are many opinions there are many truths. It just means that people can be wrong. There have been many opinions about the configuration of the galaxy, over the history of astronomy. But there has only ever been one truth.And one can add that there in no proof that Christianity is correct. There are many religions.
There are powerful arguments and plenty of evidence; but skeptics rarely sit still for any of it.There is no proof that there is a god.
You will be able to judge the against the reality...when you meet God.There is no proof that the descriptions of God are correct.
It's always interesting to me that cynics always want there both to be a final Judgment, and also not to be a final Judgment. First, they accuse God of being unjust, because evil men get away with things; then they accuse Him of being unkind, because evil men don't get away with things (i.e. Judgment comes).There is no proof that there is a hell.
Maybe you’d be interested in a religion that rewards doing great harm, with Paradise.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Sun Mar 08, 2026 2:16 pm It would be nice if only people who did great harm to humans went to Hell and not the rest of us because we don't happen to be very religious.
That's kind of the exact opposite thing to say in response to what I said. But, whatever.Walker wrote: ↑Sun Mar 08, 2026 2:25 pmMaybe you’d be interested in a religion that rewards doing great harm, with Paradise.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Sun Mar 08, 2026 2:16 pm It would be nice if only people who did great harm to humans went to Hell and not the rest of us because we don't happen to be very religious.
It's reality. Some folks are interested in that kind of religion, and Paradise is not Hell. In fact, Paradise is better than Hell.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Sun Mar 08, 2026 2:27 pmThat's kind of the exact opposite thing to say in response to what I said. But, whatever.Walker wrote: ↑Sun Mar 08, 2026 2:25 pmMaybe you’d be interested in a religion that rewards doing great harm, with Paradise.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Sun Mar 08, 2026 2:16 pm It would be nice if only people who did great harm to humans went to Hell and not the rest of us because we don't happen to be very religious.